Water management in the Flemish steel industry: the Arcelor Gent case |
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Authors: | R. Mortier C. Block C. Vandecasteele |
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Affiliation: | (1) Arcelor Gent, John Kennedylaan 51, 9042 Gent, Belgium;(2) Leuven Engineering School, Groep T, Vesaliusstraat 13, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;(3) Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Leuven, W. de Croylaan 46, 3001 Heverlee, Belgium |
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Abstract: | Steel production is an energy- and water-intensive process: large quantities of water are used for cooling, process and environmental-technical applications. In the mid-1990s, Arcelor Gent, a large integrated carbon steel producing company in Flanders (Belgium), started a number of water-related projects: the existing water infrastructure was adapted: the water from the coke plant was biologically treated; canal water was demineralised using reverse osmosis; waste water from the blast furnaces was neutralised with alkaline water from the steel plant. As a result of these projects, the quantity of discharged waste water was reduced by a factor of 2 (water recycling doubled from a factor of 10 to a factor of 20), and the discharge of pollutants decreased. Also resource consumption decreased: lime used in the steel plant, could be recovered to precipitate Zn in the waste water of the blast furnaces. Arcelor Gent obtained for these projects several Environmental Awards. |
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Keywords: | Steel industry Waste water treatment Sustainable water management Water recycling Industrial symbiosis |
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